Marjorie
Henderson Buell
Little
Lulu's Mother
Marjorie Henderson Buell became the first
female cartoonist in
the American press with the world-famous Little
Lulu. This comic is remembered because it is a story.
Marjorie Henderson Buell, Little
Lulu's Mother
Marjorie Henderson Buell became the
first female cartoonist in the American press with the world-famous Little
Lulu. This comic is remembered because it is a story of a mischievous little
girl. Henderson Buell was the pioneer in featuring a girl as the protagonist of
a comic, although the character has a strong, independent, and unconventional
character: she is a girl who outsmarts the boys. Her career began early after
she demonstrated her drawing ability. At 16, she had already published her
first comic strip in The Philadelphia Ledger, which was later bought by the
magazine's syndicate and eventually ended up being published in Life.
[single-related post_id="881395"] In 1934, cartoonist Henderson Buell
was working for The Saturday Evening Post. The newspaper published a cartoon
character named 'Henry,' but after leaving the publication, which was bought by
the syndicate, the editor asked Buell to create a new character. Thus, in 1934,
Little Lulu appeared in the comic pages of Saturday Evening Post. She replaced
the male character with a little girl. She drew the character for nearly ten
years, and in 1944, a cartoon adaptation was made, and Little Lulu became a
series that reached various European and Latin American countries. From that
year on, John Stanley was in charge of defining the lines that brought the doll
to life in the pages of the magazine, and Henderson Buell was in charge of
writing the scripts that added flair to the character. The cartoon's compilation
books were published in several languages: Arabic, Finnish, Japanese, Spanish,
and Greek. Marjorie Henderson Buell retired from drawing in 1971 at the age of
64, having dedicated 40 of those years to her career. She ended her life in her
home in Ohio, and her family took over from drawing comics. She lived until she
was 88, when lymphoma caused her death on May 30, 1993.
With affection,
Ruben
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